True. The chemical properties of substituted hydrocarbons aren't different than the properties of the original hydrocarbons.
True. The chemical properties of substituted hydrocarbons aren't different than the properties of the original hydrocarbons.
A chemical reaction will result in a product with not only chemical properties (which are different than the reactants), but also physical properties (which are also different from the reactants).
A substance that has properties different from the chemical elements in it is a chemical compound. A chemical compound is built from chemical elements that are chemically bonded together. And the "finished product" will have chemical properties that are unique to that compound, and different from the properties of the substances that make it up.
SUBSTANCE
Starting with C4H10, hydrocarbons can have multiple configurations, called isomers, for the same formula. These isomers are regarded as different compounds and have different physical and chemical properties. In such cases simply using the chemical formula would be ambiguous.
True. The chemical properties of substituted hydrocarbons aren't different than the properties of the original hydrocarbons.
hydrocarbons (arenes), alkanes, alkenes, cycloalkanes and alkyne-based compounds are different types of hydrocarbons.
Kutta kamina Haramkhor
Hydrocarbons have only hydrogen and carbon atoms. They also burn well.
No. Chemical and physical properties are different.
its different because physical it bruoght on by us and chemical is different particles from once was a different substance.
A chemical reaction will result in a product with not only chemical properties (which are different than the reactants), but also physical properties (which are also different from the reactants).
A substance that has properties different from the chemical elements in it is a chemical compound. A chemical compound is built from chemical elements that are chemically bonded together. And the "finished product" will have chemical properties that are unique to that compound, and different from the properties of the substances that make it up.
SUBSTANCE
No; each chemical element has different properties.
Because reactants and products have different chemical compositions and consequently different chemical and physical properties.
Physical and chemical properties change as the result of a chemical change, which produces new products with different physical and chemical properties than the reactants.